"They allowed us to lay on the bed with her," said Patti. "And I put my head on her heart and I said, 'Keep it going honey, somebody needs it.' I said, 'You did good.'"

In the parking lot, they saw the helicopter waiting to transport Pamela's organs. It was the University of Michigan's Survival Flight.

A letter from Gift of Life of Michigan told them Pamela's liver went to a 15-year-old boy and one of her kidneys went to a 15 year-old boy. After seeing a story on Local 4, featuring two 15 year-old boys who received transplants on Christmas Day at U of M, the Praills say they have no doubt, those boys received their daughter's organs.

"To see them so young and so close to being gone from their families and for them to be brought back, it's a miracle," said Pamela's brother Ryan Praill. "My sister is a Christmas miracle."

"I feel like we can find comfort in knowing that these boys have a second chance," said Nicole Praill, Pamela's sister-in-law. "She had such a big heart."

There is an international twist to all of this. If Pamela and her mom had stayed in Canada that day, her organs would have stayed there too. They would have gone to different people, or perhaps, to no one at all.

"Had she been at home, she probably would have died in her sleep and those organs probably would have not been used," said Patti.

Pamela's family wonders if the boys will develop her fondness for candy or her love for winter and snow. They have a message for the teenagers.

"Don't be sad. You didn't cause her death. You get to live from her death, and that is what makes it so much easier for us," said Patti.

Most of all, they hope Pamela can inspire others to give the gift of life.

"She was able to help countless people," said Pamela's boyfriend Michael Broser. "One thing I like to think is somewhere out there, her heart is still beating."

Pamela's organs saved the lives of at least five people and her donation of bone, tendons and tissue helped countless others. The Praills say they would very much like to meet all of the recipients someday and tell them about their daughter. They are dedicated to encouraging more people to join the organ donor registries in the United States and in Canada.

"Everyone wants to know what they can do to help you," said Marc. "All we can ask is to register."

"She earned her wings, and she went directly to Heaven on Christmas Day," said Patti. "It does make it easier to know she didn't die in vain."